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Actually no. Nemo's dad just swim around the Pacific tropical area (maybe water around Eastern part of Indonesia or water around Papua New Guinea) and then go to Southern Australia. Sydney. And yes, in that Eastern part of Indonesia's water and also the Philippines water there are some military naval equipment things. Like the military ship wreck and the sea mine. Eastern part of Indonesia > some random trench(maybe Mariana Trench?) > Sydney. That's the route maybe.
@hawkturkey well yes but there is one way to prove which side of the equator you're on you just need a bucket with a hole in it, but if you are in the middle of an ocean and you're not a marine biologist it's a lot harder to know which ocean you're in
I love that map of the one ocean. Showed it to my brother and we argued for a minute or two over what exactly was North America. The world is almost unrecognizable when you change your viewpoint from what you've seen your whole life.
I have never imagined seeing Jacque Cousteau and Kujo Jotaro in the same frame, and Im really wondering if the pink haired character is a reference as well...
Why would anyone ever get mad at a pun anyways? Maybe apart from situations where joking in general is considered inapproriate, like at funerals. Heck, I literally listen to a podcast called Pun Watch, and I love it.
@@FunnyMemes-dr3se Believe me I've felt that pain brother. Especially when you're in a group and everybody's laughing but you at the joke, so you just nervously chuckle hoping none notice your awkwardness. But having it explained is equally condescending, so I only do that if people want me to.
But they are talking from an oceanic diversity and similarity point of view. For land, its easy to understand what lives where since most land borders are close enough together to make a fine enough boundary for identifying unique animals or geography. But with the ocean, since we mostly travel over it, or on its surface, identifying what lives below it at a glance is much harder with the current, very broad geographic regions in place. And trying to divide them by other factors, such as underwater geography, currents, temperature, or salinity is just as hard.
@@pauldeddens5349 true - but at least this video totally omits the really sticky issues (and I'm glad it did, because that one issue is honestly just a show of human's worst).
@hawkturkey Well this video isn't an argument to redefine basic geographic maps of the oceans as we use them, its to help educate people how vague our geographic borders for them are, and the other ways it could be organized, not that we should adopt or change the system
@jocaguz18 kinda... it's ironic I know. But I often hope that humans realize how puny and powerless we actually are and appreciate the larger forces for a bit.
@@mukrifachri So true, mankind think that they are a big deal on this universe n the reality is death n khalaasss, I don't know if anyone agree with me or not but I felt it!!!!!
It depends what you're splitting stuff up based on. If it's for a nation's political influence, of course they're going to be based on nation boundaries. If it's for tectonic activity, you'll split them up according to the plates. If it's for marine biology, it'll be split based on biodiversity variables. The maps you often see are just using the per nation PoV, since most people see the world as a bunch of nations rather than what tectonic plate or wildlife is present.
The arbitrary lines on the map for ocean divisions are mostly navigational in nature. While "Panthalasia" isn't exactly in common use, "the ocean" is with the same intended meaning of a single body of water. All the other divisions like the Southern Ocean, the North Atlantic Current, the Sargasso Sea, etc. are purpose built for what they need to describe and don't care if they overlap some boundary meant for something else. The Atlantic, Pacific and others like them originated with cartographers trying to designate where things were based on where people were going, and they still kind of function that way. Those "pointiest bit" lines are navigation choke points and that's really the point of these divisions. The difficulty in getting from one ocean to another via a boat on the surface. And for that reason, they really shouldn't change. The Southern Ocean is important for scientific research, but for navigation it has no choke point. The north/south split of the Atlantic didn't even go away, it just has limited use for vessels where it matters. And we saw how important these distinctions are for navigation when the Suez Canal was blocked. If I turn a ship too sharp and it runs aground in between the north and south Atlantic, you probably won't even notice because you barely have to adjust course to get around it on the very unlikely case you were on the exact same course. But to get from one navigational ocean to the next requires going through one of the few spaces marked off by "pointy bits" or a canal. The problem is using the wrong tool for the wrong job. If you are using a hammer to put in a screw, it's not that the hammer is a bad tool and we should stop making hammers. You just chose the wrong tool. And that's what's happening here. These tools do their job just fine. Getting screws into wood seems kind of important, just as the various scientific aspects of the ocean seem kind of important (1:53), but the hammer and these navigational oceans are perfectly valid tools when you use them for the right things.
As far as I am concerned, there is at least 7 ways how to divide oceans and possibly many more, and some scientists do recognise the Southern / Antarctic Ocean. And the same thing pretty much hoes for continents, the very number of continents differ by who you ask and especially Europe and Asia have rather arbitrary border:)
"While these boundaries may be clear and convenient, they don't really say much of anything about the oceans themselves... which seems kinda important." Don't worry, it isn't. Categorization and nomenclature is inherently subjective and relative to perception. The length of the second doesn't tell us anything about the nature of time. The unit of the meter doesn't tell us anything about the nature of distance or space. The only important aspects of a particular ocean division scheme is that it is 1. consistent, and 2. agreed upon. A lot of categorizations aren't even clear or convenient, so the fact that ocean divisions already have that going for them makes the existing divisions worth keeping around.
All the JoJo and Pokemon references... And yet the first thing that caught my eye was the rubber ducky - because of the huge spill of them and how they ended up everywhere, helping to map ocean currents.
Actually, the world technically has three oceans (where "ocean" is defined as a single contiguous expanse of oceanic crust); the World Ocean, the Black Sea, and the Caspian Sea. The Black Sea is separate because, while the Strait of Gibraltar is oceanic crust and so connects the Mediterranean to the World Ocean, the Bosphorus is actually over continental crust, and so separates the Black Sea from the World Ocean.
"Cut and Dried"? Really? Also, aren't the ocean (and sea and lake and ...) names for human beings to understand where they are? Why would things like salinity matter?
Salinity, water currents and temperature influence what life forms inhabit a certain part of the ocean and its shape and geology. It would be more useful to divide the oceans according to characteristics they share because it makes studying and comprehending them easier.
Because salinity is factor that can be used to differentiate the world ocean cause it's all connected unlikes lakes and rivers (you could argue rivers are still connected to the ocean but it's going uphill and inland and it's very distinct where rivers begin and end). Salinity changes the ecosystem that a certain areas in the world ocean will display, also I'm assuming there using multiple factors not just salinity to divide the oceans
How saline the water is would have lots of effects on the environment within the waters. It would effect the plants and animals that live there and the propensity of the water to freeze or change temperature. When trying to look for unifying characteristics it seems reasonable.
I appreciate the replies. I get why "salinity matters" for things like what lives in each patch of water, its freezing temp, etc. But I stand by the assertion names are for human readability. If the salinity, currents, life, etc. off the coast of, say, Senegal was vastly different than off the coast of Mauritania, calling them different names might make sense to marine biologists, but it would confuse the hell out of "normal people".
Agreed - location is one reason to divide and separate the oceans. But as we learn more about all Earth's water, it's becoming clear that geographical location is only one of many ways we *could* divide the oceans - and it seems that it doesn't do a very good job of describing any actual characteristics of the ocean water itself. So it depends a bit on why you want to divide up the oceans in the first place...that's why this is such a difficult question to which there's probably no perfect answer! -Kate
It’s kinda ironic that the one ocean that is unofficial is the ocean most clearly defined from the rest of the oceans and most recognised my the scientific community
I think that they should be divided according to our needs like the case with the southern and northern Atlantic (I mean these hydrographirs could always come handy in my suggestion) , but make other versions of ocean mapsdepending on that factors like saltiness geology you name it .
Why? That definition is pretty recent, Australia says it borders that ocean and basically the definition of it has been all over the place which is why it isn't really taught to most people unless one is part of a specialty field.
the three youtubers:they dont mi- MinuteEarth:very very very very VERY WRONGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
This comment will probably never be seen because of how late it is. Let us all acknowledge how hilarious the animation was. Great job. Really enjoyed it.
There is actually another natural divide between two seas; tbf they are not oceans, but I think it deserves a mention. The Baltic sea and the North sea have different densities and salt levels too. They meet at the tip of Denmark, so coincidentally at the same point where IHO would draw the border.
Independent oceans for each current like a continent, with oceanic "countries" or subcontinents divided by ecosystems (to clearly define temperature, weather, wildlife) across the water and thru the water column. Sounds a bit fantastical like an elvin tree city... layers as different sub continents, with side boarders were the ecosystems change or currents occur. Why not?
Jotaro when asked to map out the oceans, "Yare Yare daze, it's all one giant ass body of water, can't you fools see I'm busy with my precious marine animals (*holds up starfish and dolphin plushie*) and make sure to put dolphins on the map and gyarados"
Always love the content but I am having a hard time focusing because of the reader, seems more shrill than usual. I dont mean to offend! Just voicing something I noticed, keep up the good work!
The point about the water close to ocean borders being the same and more similar than water in other parts of the same section of water can also be said about land on either sides of borders between countries. Borders are often arbitrary and made up to suit human perspective and ideology.
Boy, the fact that I'm living in a world in which more people comment about the JoJo refference than the Pokémon refferences (The ocean current girl is Misty, guys! Misty! There is also Gyarados hanging around) makes me feel old.
As a worldwide website you should forget these primitive units (miles, feet, inches, Fahrenheit....), used only by poor scientists in a handful of isolationist countries and rather use and promote the international system of units !
Oh? You’re approaching the ocean? Instead of sailing away, you’re coming right to me? Even though your map, Mercator, arbitrarily cuts the ocean into seven oceans, like an European Monarch scrambling to split up Africa into countries until the last moments before independence. I can’t study dolphins without getting closer. Oh ho! Then come as close as you like.
The ocean of support from viewers like you makes MinuteEarth possible! Want to become our Patreon or member on TH-cam? Just visit www.patreon.com/MinuteEarth or click "JOIN". Thanks!
Wth you just uploaded but it shows 18 hours ago...
@@coolguy3848 Top 10 Things Science Can't Explain
@@coolguy3848 Most videos are uploaded early so they can checked for errors before released
I guess...I also heard members can view this videos early
I love the references that u guys always put. Well done animator XD
your voice is lovely
Water at the edge of the Indian Ocean:
Pacific Ocean: Oh, you're approaching me?
(^-^)
KONO DIO DAAAA
Is tHaT a JoJo ReFrEnCe?
I can't find all those dolphins without getting closer.
Hoho~ Then come close as much as you like
*Nemo:* No wonder I got lost
Haha Lmao
100th like
Actually no. Nemo's dad just swim around the Pacific tropical area (maybe water around Eastern part of Indonesia or water around Papua New Guinea) and then go to Southern Australia. Sydney.
And yes, in that Eastern part of Indonesia's water and also the Philippines water there are some military naval equipment things. Like the military ship wreck and the sea mine.
Eastern part of Indonesia > some random trench(maybe Mariana Trench?) > Sydney. That's the route maybe.
Dory: no wonder I stopped bothering to remember. Wait, what did I remember?
Why do I see u everywhere ur in hororo Chan's channel,shinmen takezo,Elgin and this one too
I have literally had this question my whole life lol.
I don't lol i'm just like ''oh so they cut the ocean into different parts'' and just move on with it never question why
Alfred Mohammed - Ditto
why do we bother doing this anyway
Coincidence
U still have it ig since there seems to be no satisfying answer
1:57 oh ho ho you're aproaching the pacific ocean
I have to get closer to count the dolphins
@@theeggman1199 in that case come as close as you like
@hawkturkey well yes but there is one way to prove which side of the equator you're on you just need a bucket with a hole in it, but if you are in the middle of an ocean and you're not a marine biologist it's a lot harder to know which ocean you're in
@hawkturkey They were doing a JoJo reference-
I love that map of the one ocean. Showed it to my brother and we argued for a minute or two over what exactly was North America. The world is almost unrecognizable when you change your viewpoint from what you've seen your whole life.
I have never imagined seeing Jacque Cousteau and Kujo Jotaro in the same frame, and Im really wondering if the pink haired character is a reference as well...
Praise Cousteau's critical contribution for ocean exploring
Misty is in this video too
I saw the pink hair and was like "hey that kinda looks like Trish" then bang Jotaro the Marine Biologist shows up
It seems fitting, both Jacque and Jotaro really care about the Dolphins.
@Farm of Potatoes how to explain the joke to the rest of us.
0:11 hold on this map changes everything
I love the Spilhaus projection!
This is the map any ship traveling the Earth's oceans should use.
It just made my brain commit alt-F4
@@jamesmnguyen but don't they already use it? It's why most planes and ships curve over and over
Africa is *S M O L*
Everyone talking about the Jojo reference, and no one gonna mention the Gyarados chilling in the Atlantic 0:03
Or the Finding Nemo reference at 1:49 and the Pingu reference at 2:32
Misty is also around!
Tomás de Lima Freitas where
@@BB_GreenTheE Not together with Gyarados, but more at the end of the video, wearing a snorkel for... ocean currents studying?
A bit of fun fact. The part where the said Jojo reference has the portrait of the biggest contributor of Ocean exploring Jacques Cousteau.
1:56 Of course there is a Jojo reference
Yare Yare
Ora ora ora
He's a marine biologist. But i can't remember who's the one next to him.
Jotaro: Hmmm i thinking where is dolphins
Yes.
I still can't belive I've been watching this channel for 3 years! I guess I just enjoy gaining knowlege from this channel, thank you! 💪
Nobody talking about that Pingu reference at 2:37?
juli123456789123 noot
@@TheKingdutch noot
Noot noot
Noot Noot Boiiii
noot NOOT
1:57 I didn't expect a JoJo reference here
Jotaro p4
Wtf is a jojo?!?
@@prima808 jojo's bizzare adventure
Just watched the misinformation video, now I’m here. Thank goodness I can rely on channels like this one for accurate information.
which video was that
@@jesusmejia79 "youtube is misleading you, help us make it better'
Are you being sarcastic or honest? I feel honest, but sarcasm is hard to pick up on through text.
Same here
1:57 is that a jojo reference :)
He's a marine biologist, after all.
A bit of fun fact. The portrait where the said Jojo reference has the portrait of the biggest contributor of Ocean exploring Jacques Cousteau.
Star platinum
dolphin
WTF IS JOJO?
You thought it was a regular
MinuteEarth Vid .
But It was I CONO JOJO REFERENCE DA
1:58
Nani?!
I don't want to be that guy, but it's "KONO" not CONO... Anyway, you are a man of culture
@@FDL_1401
I see you are a man of culture as well.
cringe
0:17 I came up with a better name: "world encircling transcontinental ocean" aka the "wet ocean"
You have earned, *Belly laugh*
2:54 Awwww...I can't get mad when a pun is read that cute. 😁
Why would anyone ever get mad at a pun anyways? Maybe apart from situations where joking in general is considered inapproriate, like at funerals.
Heck, I literally listen to a podcast called Pun Watch, and I love it.
The problem is when you don't get the pun. Like me...
@@FunnyMemes-dr3se Believe me I've felt that pain brother. Especially when you're in a group and everybody's laughing but you at the joke, so you just nervously chuckle hoping none notice your awkwardness.
But having it explained is equally condescending, so I only do that if people want me to.
@@joelproko nah I would never be truly mad. I might GROAN loudly, but never true anger.
Dividing oceans is about identifying geographical regions - places on the globe relative to each other. Exactly the same as land.
But they are talking from an oceanic diversity and similarity point of view. For land, its easy to understand what lives where since most land borders are close enough together to make a fine enough boundary for identifying unique animals or geography. But with the ocean, since we mostly travel over it, or on its surface, identifying what lives below it at a glance is much harder with the current, very broad geographic regions in place. And trying to divide them by other factors, such as underwater geography, currents, temperature, or salinity is just as hard.
@@pauldeddens5349 true - but at least this video totally omits the really sticky issues (and I'm glad it did, because that one issue is honestly just a show of human's worst).
@hawkturkey Well this video isn't an argument to redefine basic geographic maps of the oceans as we use them, its to help educate people how vague our geographic borders for them are, and the other ways it could be organized, not that we should adopt or change the system
@jocaguz18 kinda... it's ironic I know. But I often hope that humans realize how puny and powerless we actually are and appreciate the larger forces for a bit.
@@mukrifachri So true, mankind think that they are a big deal on this universe n the reality is death n khalaasss, I don't know if anyone agree with me or not but I felt it!!!!!
2:05 Gym leader misty wants to battle
It depends what you're splitting stuff up based on. If it's for a nation's political influence, of course they're going to be based on nation boundaries. If it's for tectonic activity, you'll split them up according to the plates. If it's for marine biology, it'll be split based on biodiversity variables.
The maps you often see are just using the per nation PoV, since most people see the world as a bunch of nations rather than what tectonic plate or wildlife is present.
Humans are perfect at dividing like they divides themselves on the basis
1 . Religion
2 . Country
3 . Colour
4 . Caste
5 . Money
Etc....
taste
@@noahosborne6454 you eat them?
@@myzerio3450 well I do 😳
@@myzerio3450 you are what you eat
@@schizophreniagaming1187 that explained why I'm so "chicken"
1:55 "oh cool a dolphin"
*literally next frame*
Jotaro: "hmm yes vary nice dolphen"
There's some signs near where I live and it pointing out a aquarium and it's a fish I I named him jotaro
The arbitrary lines on the map for ocean divisions are mostly navigational in nature. While "Panthalasia" isn't exactly in common use, "the ocean" is with the same intended meaning of a single body of water. All the other divisions like the Southern Ocean, the North Atlantic Current, the Sargasso Sea, etc. are purpose built for what they need to describe and don't care if they overlap some boundary meant for something else.
The Atlantic, Pacific and others like them originated with cartographers trying to designate where things were based on where people were going, and they still kind of function that way. Those "pointiest bit" lines are navigation choke points and that's really the point of these divisions. The difficulty in getting from one ocean to another via a boat on the surface. And for that reason, they really shouldn't change. The Southern Ocean is important for scientific research, but for navigation it has no choke point. The north/south split of the Atlantic didn't even go away, it just has limited use for vessels where it matters.
And we saw how important these distinctions are for navigation when the Suez Canal was blocked. If I turn a ship too sharp and it runs aground in between the north and south Atlantic, you probably won't even notice because you barely have to adjust course to get around it on the very unlikely case you were on the exact same course. But to get from one navigational ocean to the next requires going through one of the few spaces marked off by "pointy bits" or a canal.
The problem is using the wrong tool for the wrong job. If you are using a hammer to put in a screw, it's not that the hammer is a bad tool and we should stop making hammers. You just chose the wrong tool. And that's what's happening here. These tools do their job just fine. Getting screws into wood seems kind of important, just as the various scientific aspects of the ocean seem kind of important (1:53), but the hammer and these navigational oceans are perfectly valid tools when you use them for the right things.
As far as I am concerned, there is at least 7 ways how to divide oceans and possibly many more, and some scientists do recognise the Southern / Antarctic Ocean. And the same thing pretty much hoes for continents, the very number of continents differ by who you ask and especially Europe and Asia have rather arbitrary border:)
Every time I watch a MinuteEarth video I grow more convinced that they make them solely for the pun at the end.
"While these boundaries may be clear and convenient, they don't really say much of anything about the oceans themselves... which seems kinda important." Don't worry, it isn't. Categorization and nomenclature is inherently subjective and relative to perception. The length of the second doesn't tell us anything about the nature of time. The unit of the meter doesn't tell us anything about the nature of distance or space. The only important aspects of a particular ocean division scheme is that it is 1. consistent, and 2. agreed upon. A lot of categorizations aren't even clear or convenient, so the fact that ocean divisions already have that going for them makes the existing divisions worth keeping around.
Me, an intellectual: *Minecraft biome borders*
YES
1:56 WAS THAT A JOJO REFERENCE?!?!?
Jotaro is a marine biologist :3
YAS QUEEN, YASSSSS
Which jojo there are lots of things called jojo
Oliver Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure. It’s an Anime.
Minute Earth: **draws dashed lines in the ocean**
China: **plotting**
All the JoJo and Pokemon references... And yet the first thing that caught my eye was the rubber ducky - because of the huge spill of them and how they ended up everywhere, helping to map ocean currents.
Actually, the world technically has three oceans (where "ocean" is defined as a single contiguous expanse of oceanic crust); the World Ocean, the Black Sea, and the Caspian Sea. The Black Sea is separate because, while the Strait of Gibraltar is oceanic crust and so connects the Mediterranean to the World Ocean, the Bosphorus is actually over continental crust, and so separates the Black Sea from the World Ocean.
1:56 "ah, I see you are man of culture "
Everyone : jojo reference
Me: 2:19 IS THAT MISTY FROM POKÉMON?
(Draws unknown lands and oceans)
Ancient cartographers: Here be monsters
1:58 I NOTICED THAT IMMEDIATELY OMG
"Cut and Dried"? Really?
Also, aren't the ocean (and sea and lake and ...) names for human beings to understand where they are? Why would things like salinity matter?
Salinity, water currents and temperature influence what life forms inhabit a certain part of the ocean and its shape and geology. It would be more useful to divide the oceans according to characteristics they share because it makes studying and comprehending them easier.
Because salinity is factor that can be used to differentiate the world ocean cause it's all connected unlikes lakes and rivers (you could argue rivers are still connected to the ocean but it's going uphill and inland and it's very distinct where rivers begin and end). Salinity changes the ecosystem that a certain areas in the world ocean will display, also I'm assuming there using multiple factors not just salinity to divide the oceans
How saline the water is would have lots of effects on the environment within the waters. It would effect the plants and animals that live there and the propensity of the water to freeze or change temperature. When trying to look for unifying characteristics it seems reasonable.
I appreciate the replies. I get why "salinity matters" for things like what lives in each patch of water, its freezing temp, etc.
But I stand by the assertion names are for human readability. If the salinity, currents, life, etc. off the coast of, say, Senegal was vastly different than off the coast of Mauritania, calling them different names might make sense to marine biologists, but it would confuse the hell out of "normal people".
Agreed - location is one reason to divide and separate the oceans. But as we learn more about all Earth's water, it's becoming clear that geographical location is only one of many ways we *could* divide the oceans - and it seems that it doesn't do a very good job of describing any actual characteristics of the ocean water itself. So it depends a bit on why you want to divide up the oceans in the first place...that's why this is such a difficult question to which there's probably no perfect answer! -Kate
1:56 *IS THAT A JOJO'S REFERENCE?!*
ARE YOU A JOJO REFERENCE
@@CarlHedgehog YOUR NEXT LINE IS: "YES, I AM!"
It’s kinda ironic that the one ocean that is unofficial is the ocean most clearly defined from the rest of the oceans and most recognised my the scientific community
1:57 Just remember he became a marine biologist by writing a thesis on a starfish he saw the other day
Its amazing to think that the Oceans are the hugest biome in the entire planet
I like how it gets to the point well more like reveals it's a trick question
Omfg that JoJo reference was so unexpected by so welcomed!
When jotaro has trouble dividing the ocean
*HEAVY BREATHING*
Sci show tangents also released their podcast on oceans today.
I have to say, 8 love seeing Misty and Jotaro in these vids.
Water sorrounding Antartica: :(
Cold water beyblade: :)
Never in my life had i thought that i will see a jojo reference in a minute earth video
2:04 Misty!
best video i "ever" watched from MinuteEarth
Proving yet again that Australia & Antarctica are both islands.
At 2:46 you say of the Southern Ocean, "it isn't officially deemed an ocean", didn't the IHO so designate it in 2000?
1:55
HE’S HERE
Suta Pratchna: Za Waarudo
hm... Rohan is late, weird... let's go searching for him, Koichi
Good video! I hope your videos continue as great!
1:30 you could make the same argument about land borders
@ i think he mean divyyin the lands into diffy continents
@ i think he mean divvyin the land into diffy continents
Thanks for answering my life long question
I think that they should be divided according to our needs like the case with the southern and northern Atlantic (I mean these hydrographirs could always come handy in my suggestion) , but make other versions of ocean mapsdepending on that factors like saltiness geology you name it .
I bet that not only this video is brilliant but also the website too
1:55 Holy moly is this a jojo refrence
what was the reference? just the hat?
@ the pose too I think
In Australia we call all the ocean along our south coast the Southern Ocean, not the Indian. Only once you start facing West is it the Indian
0:15 I just call it "The Ocean".
2:08 misty be like: yep, the ocean's breedable as always
You expected learning about oceans but it was me A JoJo Reference
1:57 shush, Mr jotaro is investigating oceans and dolphins with MinuteEarth
Wow! there's actually an organization for dividing oceans and seas, I thought dividing them was done arbitrarily.
If I’ve learnt anything in adulthood is that there is an organisation for everything
@@suhanaahmed4960 😃
In my country Spain, in the school we count the antartic ocean as a separated one
Why? That definition is pretty recent, Australia says it borders that ocean and basically the definition of it has been all over the place which is why it isn't really taught to most people unless one is part of a specialty field.
Bright side: these oceans don't mix
MinuteEarth: Actually no
Kelly N true
the three youtubers:they dont mi-
MinuteEarth:very very very very VERY WRONGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
@@angelitacortez6294 what
Yes
That is because Bright Side is wrong
Can you (minute earth team) make a video about how we could prevent bedbugs come to our couches,beds,etc and bite us???
99% of comments: ohlookajojoreference
1% (me): I don't Jojo, so…
Blasphemy!!!!!
Ya actually me too 😂😭😅😅
Relatable.
I love your art style and videos! Your videos are really interesting.
:)
1:57 they just had to put him there huh
This comment will probably never be seen because of how late it is. Let us all acknowledge how hilarious the animation was. Great job. Really enjoyed it.
Could you please use SI units...
The rest of the world have no sense of what a mile is let alone a square mile....
:0
True
I've seen enough. I'm satisfied.
There is actually another natural divide between two seas; tbf they are not oceans, but I think it deserves a mention. The Baltic sea and the North sea have different densities and salt levels too. They meet at the tip of Denmark, so coincidentally at the same point where IHO would draw the border.
Good news the Southern Ocean has officially been recognized as an ocean today.
By natgeo but who decided they're the boss? To other groups it's been recognized for years, and to others, it is still not recognized.
Guys.
_We know_ that there's a JoJo reference at 1:55.
We don't need literally _hundreds_ of nearly identical comments.
Dolphin
Independent oceans for each current like a continent, with oceanic "countries" or subcontinents divided by ecosystems (to clearly define temperature, weather, wildlife) across the water and thru the water column. Sounds a bit fantastical like an elvin tree city... layers as different sub continents, with side boarders were the ecosystems change or currents occur. Why not?
It seems this video was all about looking for a simple solution by knocking the current simple solution.
Agreed, this one seemed pretty pointless.
It's all so problematic.
Yare Yare Daze.
Jotaro when asked to map out the oceans, "Yare Yare daze, it's all one giant ass body of water, can't you fools see I'm busy with my precious marine animals (*holds up starfish and dolphin plushie*) and make sure to put dolphins on the map and gyarados"
Oof, those ocean jokes are salty!
Good video but I would likr to add in the point that the southern ocean is officially recognised by many organisations as the 5th ocean
2:13 that lady's hat looks like the roblox bc hat 0-o
R.I.P. builders club
whos gonna tell them
This was one year ago when builders club still existed
Please read it lol
Gotta love those pokemon refrences. Keep making great videos!
Always love the content but I am having a hard time focusing because of the reader, seems more shrill than usual. I dont mean to offend! Just voicing something I noticed, keep up the good work!
Ikr? The way her voice vibrates is weird sometimes, is vocal fry the correct way to describe that?
The point about the water close to ocean borders being the same and more similar than water in other parts of the same section of water can also be said about land on either sides of borders between countries. Borders are often arbitrary and made up to suit human perspective and ideology.
Boy, the fact that I'm living in a world in which more people comment about the JoJo refference than the Pokémon refferences (The ocean current girl is Misty, guys! Misty! There is also Gyarados hanging around) makes me feel old.
I was anticipating the pun and I still liked it!
@1:55 Starfish crusader
This will be the Lionfish's favourite video
*sees video title*
Me as an intellectual: Because of All Blue being connected to the treasure One Piece
Except Antarctica. All chill, less salt.
I love how almost all videos contain a Pokemon and other reference
As a worldwide website you should forget these primitive units (miles, feet, inches, Fahrenheit....), used only by poor scientists in a handful of isolationist countries and rather use and promote the international system of units !
Nobody is gonna talk about pingu at 2:32
Oh yeah the JoJo reference
Yes of course.
Can't forget about that
2:02 I find it funny that surface waters make the old boundaries make sense. Give the people of that era where credit is due.
Oh? You’re approaching the ocean?
Instead of sailing away, you’re coming right to me?
Even though your map, Mercator, arbitrarily cuts the ocean into seven oceans, like an European Monarch scrambling to split up Africa into countries until the last moments before independence.
I can’t study dolphins without getting closer.
Oh ho! Then come as close as you like.
take my like
Weirdly, your comment is very satisfying : )
1:57 there's only one ocean, STONE OCEAN
Global warming: don't worry guys I'll just remove the oceans
Global warming is causing the oceans to rise due to the melting of polar ice caps. It's making things more complicated and worse like usual.
So nice of you to put a shoutout to Actual Real Life Marine Biologist Kujo Jotaro. :')